Plant Biotechnology and Genetics: Principles, Techniques and Applications

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(55%: 47.4 million ha), followed by Argentina (16.93 million ha: 19% of the global total). The
other main countries planting GM crops in 2005 were Canada, Brazil, and China (Fig. 1.4).


1.3 Why Farmers Use Biotech Crops


The primary driver of adoption among farmers (both large commercial and small-scale sub-
sistence) has been the positive impact on farm income. The adoption of biotechnology has
had a very positive impact on farm income derived mainly from a combination of enhanced
productivity and efficiency gains (Table 1.1). In 2005, the direct global farm income benefit
from GM crops was $5 billion. If the additional income stemming from second crop soy-
beans in Argentina is considered,^4 this income gain rises to $5.6 billion. This is equivalent
to having added between 3.6% and 4.0% to the value of global production of the four main
crops of soybean, maize, canola, and cotton, a substantial impact. Since 1996, worldwide
farm incomes have increased by $24.2 billion or $27 billion inclusive of second-crop
soybean gains in Argentina directly because of the adoption of GM crop technology.
The largest gains in farm income have arisen in the soybean sector, largely from cost
savings, where the $2.84 billion additional income generated by GM HT soybean in
2005 has been equivalent to adding 7.1% to the value of the crop in the GM-growing
countries, or adding the equivalent of 6.05% to the $47 billion value of the global
soybean crop in 2005. These economic benefits should, however, be placed within the
context of a significant increase in the level of soybean production in the main


Figure 1.4.Global GM crop plantings 2005 by country. (Sources: ISAAA, Canola Council of
Canada, CropLife Canada, USDA, CSIRO, ArgenBio.)


(^4) The adoption of herbicide-tolerant soybean has facilitated the adoption of no and reduced tillage production prac-
tices, which effectively shorten the production season from planting to harvest. As a result, it has enabled many
farmers in Argentina to plant a crop of soybean immediately after a wheat crop in the same season (hence the
termsecond-crop soybean). In 2005, about 15% of the total soybean crop in Argentina was second-crop.
4 PLANT AGRICULTURE: THE IMPACT OF BIOTECHNOLOGY

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